neoyyf
Fish Fanatic
Hi Everyone, I am not really new here since I have been reading posts for over a year but I am quite shy so didnt really introduce myself straight away. I apologise for this and hope this is in the right category since it is a new setup.
What I am about to tell you will anger many but it has been done now and I cannot reverse it. Obviously due to my inexperience and ruthless actions, many fish have died on me but I hope you can all keep an open mind and enlighten me or elliviate some of my problems.
My tank with the problems is 4ft long and I am filling it to about 120L (30 UK gallons) with dechlorinated water. The 120L is marked off on my tank so that I keep it the same. I am using 2 double sponge filters powered by air by a powerful air pump (output of 7.3L/min). It also has a heater and I am keeping water temp at 20 degrees celcius. I have an API Master test kit which I am using to test water parameters. This tank has substrate of play sand from Argos (washed thoroughly) and has not affected water parameters.
I have another 12L tank with lots of Java Moss which did not have a filter but I only had red ramshorn snails. It now has a filter setup same time as the large tank and now I keep my guppy fry in it. It doesnt have a heater or light and I keep it near a window for natural lighting. The side facing the window is completely covered with aquarium background paper so the water does not heat up significantly in direct sunlight. It has no substrate but I keep a bag of crushed coral and limestone in nylon tights to keep my snails shells hard. I have had no fish deaths (apart from the occasional snail but they breed like rabbits anyway) or any disease related problems in this tank even though the ammonia levels can reach 1ppm.
4 weeks ago I bought 70 fish, 50 of which were guppies and 20 were neon tetras. I also got 5 glass shrimp. I got them off a hobby breeder who was doing a really good deal because he had way too many which was why I was hasty and did not have the tank cycled at all. I thought I could do major water changes everyday (50%-70%) to keep the ammonia down as everyday it would be around 0.5ppm. After water change it would be 0.25ppm. I also only fed fish once every 2 days.
About less than a week later, I thought I should buy some ammonia remover and a live bacteria boost. I bought 2 bottles of ammonia remover (100ml each), and 1 bottle of the bacteria (100ml), all Pets At Home brand with the orange caps. I immediately used the ammonia remover on the big tank and the results were amazing and had 0 ammonia readings but only for 24 hours. However I did have to dose 20ml each time so I quickly ran out of it. I used the live bacteria booster and finished the bottle.
Since those bottles are costly, I decided I should only dose once every two days and water change 30% every two days. On the second day of dosing, ammonia will creep up to 0.25ppm and water changes didnt really change this but the API doesn't show a smaller measurement.
After 3 weeks I completely ran out of the bottles and bought the Interpet Ammonia Remover for ponds. I did this because I could dose less and therefore save a little money. By the way, this brand doesnt work very well, and I end up having to dose what it says on the bottle and water change since it only takes away from 0.5ppm to 0.25ppm. At this time I also ran out of the water conditioner (Nutrafin) and bought a different brand (Hozelock) which is again meant for ponds. (It's getting very complicated now!)
This week I gave away a lot of my fish to family and friends because of the bioload. I now have about 20 guppies (not including babies) and 10 tetras. I have also swapped the glass shrimp for amano shrimp because the glass shrimp ate some of my tetras and guppes alive! I have maybe 30 snails in the large tank.
Daily readings are as follows before water change:
Ammonia 0.5ppm
Nitrite 0
Nitrate 5ppm
pH 7-8
On average I lose about 1 fish everyday due to the ammonia poisoning. Some days I dont have deaths, and other days I have 4-5. I know this because their fins clamp up and they go paralysed. Sometimes they will have bleeding around their mouths or the top of their heads and yesterday I had one who had one eye bleeding. I check the gills of all dead ones and they are always a pale pink. Guppies are supposed to be hardy and since removing the glass shrimp (a week after i got them), I have not seen one neon tetra die at all even though I thought they were less hardy.
However, this week I got really strange deaths in some of my guppies. I would find very thin guppies with like sunken in tummies so they look bent. I put food in their faces and they wont eat it. They lose colour a few hours before death and either stay near the top or rest at the bottom. I have tried to google this and the only thing I can come up with is parasites but they do not poop white strands and it has only started happening this week.
Today I thought I should go to my LFS and maybe buy a parasite medicine. Was also hoping the guy would give me some old media to help me out but since it isnt near I decided to ring them up. I tell him about my situation and was shocked to hear that in his opinion, that I was doing everything wrong. He tells me the following:
1. The fish are going thin and dying because I am not feeding daily. I should feed loads and leave bits at the bottom of the tank for them to eat later. (I don't strictly feed once every 2 days, but I do only let them feed for 2 minutes which is unsually until one or 2 pieces of flakes fall to the bottom. I also feed microworms, spirulina powder and sometimes a couple sinking algae pellets for them to play and peck at. I have fed a little more since seeing these thin guppies but they wont eat anyway?!)
2. 30% water changes is crazy because by 3 days I would have done a complete water change. I should only do 20% water changes weekly and clean the filter once a month, this is what he has done for all his new tanks, regardless of water parameters. If ammonia is high, dose with ammonia remover. He tells me that I am actually removing all the friendly bacteria in the water through the large water changes (I have read many posts advising daily water changes if the ammonia or nitrite is high. I also read that the friendly bacteria live in the filter, substrate, decorations, and tank walls...not in the water.
3. He doesnt have any old media to give me but he did try to sell me Nutrafin SafeCycle and also a call out service to check the tank and set it all up again but he wouldnt tell me what he would do or how much he would charge. (Really odd and I refused anyway. I wouldnt try safecycle anyway but may perhaps try Tetra Startcycle since I have heard amazing things about it but its going to cost me £20 a bottle, ugh).
Question time!
1. Why are some of my guppies going thin, refusing to eat and dying?
1a. Is it wrong to feed them every other day?
2. Why do I still have ammonia at unchanged levels but no nitrites? I have had no nitrites for 2 weeks!!
3. Is it wrong for me to do 30% water changes daily or every other day if I have dosed ammonia remover?
4. Why does the fry not die in my small tank even though I dont dose ammonia remover in it or do so many water changes? (I have just thought that maybe it is to do with the temperature...)
5. Is it wrong to use treatments meant for ponds to use in a tank? If so, why is this?
I forgot to add that I read that you can dose salt to stressed fish. I decided to dose 1 tablespoon for every 5 gallons with rock salt (with no other ingredients) overnight once in a while (probably once or twice a week). The next day I would change the water anyway and not replace the salt, and it doesnt seem to have any affects at all. I have not done it in the past few days. I leave my 50w flourescent light on for about 10-12 hours a day and it isnt very bright. I did have 3 large brown cattapa indian almond leaves in the tank and the water is always light brown due to tannins but decided to remove this yesterday so that the light can pentrate the water more easily. My added them because my snails eat the leaves slowly but thinking about it now, perhaps it was decaying and adding to ammonia? Well it's out now.
What I am about to tell you will anger many but it has been done now and I cannot reverse it. Obviously due to my inexperience and ruthless actions, many fish have died on me but I hope you can all keep an open mind and enlighten me or elliviate some of my problems.
My tank with the problems is 4ft long and I am filling it to about 120L (30 UK gallons) with dechlorinated water. The 120L is marked off on my tank so that I keep it the same. I am using 2 double sponge filters powered by air by a powerful air pump (output of 7.3L/min). It also has a heater and I am keeping water temp at 20 degrees celcius. I have an API Master test kit which I am using to test water parameters. This tank has substrate of play sand from Argos (washed thoroughly) and has not affected water parameters.
I have another 12L tank with lots of Java Moss which did not have a filter but I only had red ramshorn snails. It now has a filter setup same time as the large tank and now I keep my guppy fry in it. It doesnt have a heater or light and I keep it near a window for natural lighting. The side facing the window is completely covered with aquarium background paper so the water does not heat up significantly in direct sunlight. It has no substrate but I keep a bag of crushed coral and limestone in nylon tights to keep my snails shells hard. I have had no fish deaths (apart from the occasional snail but they breed like rabbits anyway) or any disease related problems in this tank even though the ammonia levels can reach 1ppm.
4 weeks ago I bought 70 fish, 50 of which were guppies and 20 were neon tetras. I also got 5 glass shrimp. I got them off a hobby breeder who was doing a really good deal because he had way too many which was why I was hasty and did not have the tank cycled at all. I thought I could do major water changes everyday (50%-70%) to keep the ammonia down as everyday it would be around 0.5ppm. After water change it would be 0.25ppm. I also only fed fish once every 2 days.
About less than a week later, I thought I should buy some ammonia remover and a live bacteria boost. I bought 2 bottles of ammonia remover (100ml each), and 1 bottle of the bacteria (100ml), all Pets At Home brand with the orange caps. I immediately used the ammonia remover on the big tank and the results were amazing and had 0 ammonia readings but only for 24 hours. However I did have to dose 20ml each time so I quickly ran out of it. I used the live bacteria booster and finished the bottle.
Since those bottles are costly, I decided I should only dose once every two days and water change 30% every two days. On the second day of dosing, ammonia will creep up to 0.25ppm and water changes didnt really change this but the API doesn't show a smaller measurement.
After 3 weeks I completely ran out of the bottles and bought the Interpet Ammonia Remover for ponds. I did this because I could dose less and therefore save a little money. By the way, this brand doesnt work very well, and I end up having to dose what it says on the bottle and water change since it only takes away from 0.5ppm to 0.25ppm. At this time I also ran out of the water conditioner (Nutrafin) and bought a different brand (Hozelock) which is again meant for ponds. (It's getting very complicated now!)
This week I gave away a lot of my fish to family and friends because of the bioload. I now have about 20 guppies (not including babies) and 10 tetras. I have also swapped the glass shrimp for amano shrimp because the glass shrimp ate some of my tetras and guppes alive! I have maybe 30 snails in the large tank.
Daily readings are as follows before water change:
Ammonia 0.5ppm
Nitrite 0
Nitrate 5ppm
pH 7-8
On average I lose about 1 fish everyday due to the ammonia poisoning. Some days I dont have deaths, and other days I have 4-5. I know this because their fins clamp up and they go paralysed. Sometimes they will have bleeding around their mouths or the top of their heads and yesterday I had one who had one eye bleeding. I check the gills of all dead ones and they are always a pale pink. Guppies are supposed to be hardy and since removing the glass shrimp (a week after i got them), I have not seen one neon tetra die at all even though I thought they were less hardy.
However, this week I got really strange deaths in some of my guppies. I would find very thin guppies with like sunken in tummies so they look bent. I put food in their faces and they wont eat it. They lose colour a few hours before death and either stay near the top or rest at the bottom. I have tried to google this and the only thing I can come up with is parasites but they do not poop white strands and it has only started happening this week.
Today I thought I should go to my LFS and maybe buy a parasite medicine. Was also hoping the guy would give me some old media to help me out but since it isnt near I decided to ring them up. I tell him about my situation and was shocked to hear that in his opinion, that I was doing everything wrong. He tells me the following:
1. The fish are going thin and dying because I am not feeding daily. I should feed loads and leave bits at the bottom of the tank for them to eat later. (I don't strictly feed once every 2 days, but I do only let them feed for 2 minutes which is unsually until one or 2 pieces of flakes fall to the bottom. I also feed microworms, spirulina powder and sometimes a couple sinking algae pellets for them to play and peck at. I have fed a little more since seeing these thin guppies but they wont eat anyway?!)
2. 30% water changes is crazy because by 3 days I would have done a complete water change. I should only do 20% water changes weekly and clean the filter once a month, this is what he has done for all his new tanks, regardless of water parameters. If ammonia is high, dose with ammonia remover. He tells me that I am actually removing all the friendly bacteria in the water through the large water changes (I have read many posts advising daily water changes if the ammonia or nitrite is high. I also read that the friendly bacteria live in the filter, substrate, decorations, and tank walls...not in the water.
3. He doesnt have any old media to give me but he did try to sell me Nutrafin SafeCycle and also a call out service to check the tank and set it all up again but he wouldnt tell me what he would do or how much he would charge. (Really odd and I refused anyway. I wouldnt try safecycle anyway but may perhaps try Tetra Startcycle since I have heard amazing things about it but its going to cost me £20 a bottle, ugh).
Question time!
1. Why are some of my guppies going thin, refusing to eat and dying?
1a. Is it wrong to feed them every other day?
2. Why do I still have ammonia at unchanged levels but no nitrites? I have had no nitrites for 2 weeks!!
3. Is it wrong for me to do 30% water changes daily or every other day if I have dosed ammonia remover?
4. Why does the fry not die in my small tank even though I dont dose ammonia remover in it or do so many water changes? (I have just thought that maybe it is to do with the temperature...)
5. Is it wrong to use treatments meant for ponds to use in a tank? If so, why is this?
I forgot to add that I read that you can dose salt to stressed fish. I decided to dose 1 tablespoon for every 5 gallons with rock salt (with no other ingredients) overnight once in a while (probably once or twice a week). The next day I would change the water anyway and not replace the salt, and it doesnt seem to have any affects at all. I have not done it in the past few days. I leave my 50w flourescent light on for about 10-12 hours a day and it isnt very bright. I did have 3 large brown cattapa indian almond leaves in the tank and the water is always light brown due to tannins but decided to remove this yesterday so that the light can pentrate the water more easily. My added them because my snails eat the leaves slowly but thinking about it now, perhaps it was decaying and adding to ammonia? Well it's out now.